The EX135 sits at the core of MG lore. Those two letters—EX—were the Abingdon shorthand for “Experimental,” a running ledger of skunk-works projects and record hunters. The numbers simply counted ...
In 1959, racing legend Phil Hill piloted the original MG EX181 streamliner to a class record with a 254.91-mph pace. The EXE181 is targeting a top speed of 257.87 mph. The EXE181 made its debut at the ...
MG turns 100 years old, and what a long, strange trip it’s been for the brand that started as a promotional project for Morris Garages in Oxford, England. Now a property of Chinese state-owned ...
What has four electric motors, one seat, and can do at least 225 miles per hour in a straight line? No, not a fighter jet – although that would fit the electric motor bill if we counted the actuators ...
If you thought that the Cyberster two-seater roadster was the sportiest MG could go, think again. The SAIC-owned brand has just unveiled the EXE181 hypercar concept for the Beijing Auto Show. This ...
The original EX181 was an experimental car built by MG to set a new land speed record. It was powered by a 1.5-liter twin-cam engine that only produced 300 hp—a number that was only reached after ...
“One hundred per cent this is an MG. It ties in with the production cars coming, it’s not just a throwaway thing.” So says Carl Gotham, European advanced design director for Chinese megacorp SAIC, ...
Obsessed with cars from a young age, Jarryd nurtured his love for all things motoring by paging through automotive magazines before he could even read. While his friends were obsessed with supercars ...
This is the MG EXE181, and it’s both a tribute to the 1957 MG EX181 land speed car, plus a streamlined 100th birthday present from MG to… itself. It’s just a concept, of course, but one that'll ...
• Developed by the brand's UK Design Centre, EXE181 merges aerodynamic design and advanced technology. • With an estimated top speed of 415 km/h, the new concept is inspired by record-breaking EX181 ...
This is the new MG EXE181 concept. It’s a homage to the ‘Roaring Raindrop’, the car that shared the EXE181 name and took a land speed record back in 1957 with a certain Sir Stirling Moss at the helm.
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